Convert Millimeter/Hour (mm/h) to Mile/Second (mi/s) instantly.
Millimeter/Hour to Mile/Second conversion
1 Millimeter/Hour (mm/h) = 1.7260311e-10 Mile/Second (mi/s). To convert Millimeter/Hour to Mile/Second, multiply the value by 1.7260311e-10.
| Millimeter/Hour (mm/h) | Mile/Second (mi/s) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1.7260311e-10 |
| 2 | 3.4520622e-10 |
| 5 | 8.6301554e-10 |
| 10 | 1.7260311e-9 |
| 25 | 4.3150777e-9 |
| 50 | 8.6301554e-9 |
| 100 | 1.7260311e-8 |
| 1000 | 1.7260311e-7 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Mile/Second are in one Millimeter/Hour?
One Millimeter/Hour (mm/h) equals 1.7260311e-10 Mile/Second (mi/s).
How do I convert Millimeter/Hour to Mile/Second?
To convert Millimeter/Hour to Mile/Second, multiply the value by 1.7260311e-10.
What is 10 Millimeter/Hour in Mile/Second?
10 Millimeter/Hour = 1.7260311e-9 Mile/Second.
About these units
Millimeter/Hour (mm/h)
A millimeter per hour is extraordinarily slow, used in geology, meteorology, and materials science to measure phenomena like soil creep, tectonic plate micro-motion, or extremely light precipitation (drizzle). In manufacturing, mm/h may describe slow deposition rates in thin-film fabrication or high-precision milling processes. Despite seeming negligible, speeds measured in mm/h can accumulate into significant changes over weeks, months, or years—making them essential for long-term studies.
Mile/Second (mi/s)
A mile per second is an extraordinarily fast speed—3,600 mph—far beyond any ground vehicle. This unit appears primarily in discussions of orbital mechanics, rocket propulsion, and reentry dynamics. Projectiles in theoretical physics or high-energy impact modeling may also be described in miles per second. The unit's infrequent use reflects its specialized nature, but its dramatic magnitude makes it compelling for illustrating the extremes of velocity attainable in space travel and astrophysics.